Ministry of Health and Family Welfare14-July, 2006 12:47 IST
India commits to address Health Care associated infection in the country

   India has committed to address the Health Care associated infection in the country.  A pledge to this effect was signed by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare in the presence of World Health Organization’s representatives at a ceremony in New Delhi today.  The Global Patient Safety Challenge with the theme “Clean Care is Safer Care” was inaugurated by the Minister of State for Health and Family Affairs, Smt. Panabaka Lakshmi.   The theme emphasizes the critical role of hand hygiene in controlling the spread of infections.

            Speaking on the occasion Smt. Lakshmi said “ the relevance of hand hygiene and infection control are being integrated in the medical curriculum and health care workers  educated to practice hand hygiene”.  The Minister told the gathering that experts from the country have contributed to the WHO guidelines on hand hygiene.  Smt. Panabaka Lakshmi said based on the recommendations of an Expert Committee, 11 hospital waste management projects have been implemented with the support from the WHO in 8 States and also in Delhi.

            The Minister also released India Country Report on Global Patient Safety Challenge.

            India is the first country of the south-eastern region to inaugurate ‘Clean Care is Safer Care’ initiative and to sign the pledge committed to address health care associated infection. 

Dr. S.J. Habayeb WHO representative in India said “signing the pledge reflects the commitment of Indian Government to address the issue of patient’s safety in the country.”   He said WHO will be closely working with the Indian Government to provide technical support.

            The Secretary, Health and Family Welfare Shri Prasanna Hota said Patients Safety Day may be declared to focus on the issue and a movement may be promoted to secure patients rights and safety. 

Prof. Didier Pittet, leader of the Global Patients Safety Challenge said “Promoting Clean Care is Safer Care is not a choice.  It is our duty to patients, their families and health-care workers.  Let us move forward together.  Each of us can make a small difference; significant improvement requires an effort from all of us.”

            Director General, DGHS, Dr. R.K. Srivastava also spoke on the occasion.

            To date about 30 countries from various regions have already signed the pledge or are planning to do so this year.  Bahrain, Belarus, Georgia, Hong Kong, Ireland, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Malaysia, Moldova, The Netherlands, The Philippines, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Tajikistan and the UK have already signed the pledge.  This event follows the Global Patient Safety Challenge launch in October 2005 at WHO Headquarters in Geneva.  India was one of the eight prominent member countries, which participated in that event. 

Background Note

Health care-associated infection is a major issue in patient safety as it affects millions of people worldwide and complicates the delivery of patient care. Infections contribute to patient deaths and disability, promote resistance to antibiotics and generate additional expenditure to those already incurred by the patients' underlying disease. At any given time, more than 1.4 million people worldwide become seriously ill from such infections. Between 5% and 10% of patients admitted to hospitals in developed countries acquire these infections, the report says. In some developing country settings, the proportion of patients affected can exceed 25%.[1]

The Global Patient Safety Challenge 2005-2006, a core programme of the World Alliance for Patient Safety, brings together the WHO Guidelines on Hand Hygiene in Health Care with ongoing work on blood safety, injection and immunization safety, safer clinical practices, and safe water, sanitation and health care waste management.

The Global Patient Safety Challenge builds upon existing country efforts and initiatives to fight health care-associated infections. Reducing the spread of these infections will be a critical step towards enhanced and long term safety in health care.

To fight the spread of health care-associated infections which affect hundreds of millions of patients worldwide each year, WHO and its partners launched the Global Patient Safety Challenge with the theme “Clean Care is Safer Care” in October 2005. As part of the launch the WHO Guidelines on Hand Hygiene in Health Care (Advanced Draft) were made available. The aim of the launch was to strengthen the commitment of interested Member States to the Global Patient Safety Challenge and the critical role of hand hygiene in controlling the spread of health care-associated infection.

The implementation of the Global Patient Safety Challenge comprises three major strategies:

global and national "Clean Care is Safer Care" campaigns,

country statements pledging to address health care-associated infection,

testing implementation in districts.

As part of the implementation strategies, WHO Member States have been invited to make a formal statement pledging their support to implement actions to reduce health care-associated infection within their country and to share results and learning internationally.

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(Release ID :18857)